We cordially invite you to visit the exhibition of painting
‘TO BECOME CALM’ 2022.03.24 – 04.09
at “ARDOR11 ” gallery in Vilnius, Ltihuania.
ADDRESS: Jakšto 9, Vilnius
THE ARTIST ABOUT THE EXHIBITION
THE ARTIST ABOUT THE EXHIBITION
When do we become silent!?
Silence hits me – when I can’t find words for what I see, hear, feel. When time stops inside me for a moment. It is a surprise that touches the deepest corner of the soul: it can be both very beautiful and very scary. I fall silent – when I see a majestic sunset or sunrise, I hold my breath to see a bumblebee on a flower, fall silent when I realize loss, betrayal, fall silent when I listen to the silence, the night, the heartbeat of a child. As an artist, I am silent when I create. The paintings will also speak for me at the exhibition.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Expressive, impulsive, gestural, sketchy, textural, evocative in color – this is how one could describe the entire work of Vilnius-based painter Birutė Nomeda Stankūnienė (b.m. 1963).
Birutė Nomeda Stankūnienė was born in 1963. in 2009 graduated from the Vilnius Academy of Arts and lives in Vilnius.
The creator’s works have been exhibited more than 30 times in Lithuania and abroad. in 2011 the book “Seven Feelings according to Job’s Drama” was published, which uses the artist’s works and designs. Reproductions of Birutė Nomeda’s works have been published in IUOMA (International Union of Postal Artists) publications, catalogs of works of art of the Italian galleries “Galleria Immaginaria” and “Florence Art Deposit Gallery”, online blogs and selected for the weekly collections of Saatchi Art Online. Exhibitions of the artist’s works were covered by the Lithuanian media and international media, such as BBC Radio Solent, CNC News/Xinhua – China’s national news agency, etc. The artist’s paintings fell into the hands of private art collectors and art lovers in Lithuania, Estonia, Finland, Russia, Italy, Poland, Holland, Denmark, the United Kingdom and the USA. The artist is a member of the global project “Slow Art Day” and the Hieronymus Bosch Project in Holland IUOMA